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Sicyopus cebuensis CHEN & SHAO, 1998

September 18th, 2012 — 10:15am

This species is not in the aquarium trade though is maintained by a few private collectors. It can be distinguished from all other members of the genus by the following combination of characters: first dorsal-fin withfirst dorsal-fin elongate in males; anterior portion of body with loosely-arranged ctenoid scales; head, entire nape to first dorsal-fin base, pectoral base, and belly naked; male colour pattern comprising creamy-yellow anterior portion of body with dark blotch at midbody and bright orange/red in postero…

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Pseudomugil tenellus TAYLOR, 1964

Delicate Blue-eye

September 17th, 2012 — 4:42pm

Euryhaline and mostly inhabits coastal floodplains where it’s found in both fresh and brackish habitats, including tidal estuaries and salt marshes. It’s particularly common in swamps, billabongs, and slow-moving streams where aquatic vegetation grows densely, but some populations have colonised upper sections of freshwater streams. Larger individuals may also move into main river channels.

Tappin (2010) gives the following ranges of parameters based on those taken from various localities: temperature 27 – 38 °C, pH 5…

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Pseudomugil cyanodorsalis ALLEN & SARTI, 1983

Neon Blue-eye

September 17th, 2012 — 11:23am

Euryhaline and thus capable of withstanding significant fluctuations in salinity and other water conditions. It’s been recorded in full marine conditions as well as pure freshwater environments, and commonly inhabits coastal mangrove creeks and swamps.

Such changes may occur on a daily or seasonal basis depending on locality, with some habitats influenced by daily tides whereas others become hypersal…

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Aphanius arakensis TEIMORI, ESMAEILI, GHOLAMI, ZAREI, & REICHENBACHER, 2012

Arak Tooth Carp

September 14th, 2012 — 10:13am

This species was available in the aquarium hobby for a number of years prior to publication of the official description and was generally referred to as A. sp. ‘Namak’ or A. sp. ‘Namak River’.

It can be distinguished from other members of the genus by the following combination of characters: 10–12 anal-fin rays; 28–32 lateral line scales, 10–13 caudal peduncle scales; 8–10 gill rakers; 12–19, commonly 1…

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Tanichthys sp. 'Vietnam'

September 14th, 2012 — 9:30am

This fish was first collected in 2009 and limited numbers have been available in the aquarium trade. Though additional exports may be unlikely it’s proven easy to breed in captivity and there’s a fair chance it will become established in the hobby. It’s sold under several names including T. sp. ‘lemon’ or ‘yellow white cloud’, and has also been misidentified as the congener T. thacbaensis, a valid species occurring much further north in Vietnam.

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Microrasbora cf. rubescens

Flame Red 'Rasbora'

September 13th, 2012 — 4:46pm

This is possibly an undescribed species and has been marketed as ‘Asian Cardinal Rasbora’, ‘flame red rasbora’, M. sp. ‘rose blue line’ or M. ‘thuzari’ in the ornamental trade.

It differs from M. rubescens by its larger adult size, possession of a greenish to bluish lateral stripe, and lesser extent of orange pigmentation on the body. It also appears to represent a distinct genetic lineage (Collins et al., 2012).

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Celestichthys flagrans KULLANDER, 2012

Northern Glowlight 'Danio'

September 13th, 2012 — 4:11pm

Known only from a handful of streams in the upper Mali Hka river drainage, Ayeyarwaddy River system, near Putao township in the far north of Kachin state, northern Myanmar.

Type locality is ‘Nan Hto Chaung in Putao, about 1 mile from 46th regiment, close to rice mill’.

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Pethia nigripinnis (KNIGHT, REMA DEVI, INDRA & ARUNACHALAM, 2012)

August 13th, 2012 — 1:09pm

At one locality in the Kalindhi drainage the water was clear, 1 m at its deepest point and flowing either side of a small check dam, below which the flow was stronger though still not particularly fast. The substrate was composed of rocks and cobbles with a thick layer of fine silt and sand above the dam. There were no aquatic plants but marginal grasses and shrubs were growing to the margins with some submerged roots protruding into the water.

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Pethia manipurensis (MENON, REMA DEVI & VISHWANATH, 2000)

August 10th, 2012 — 4:24pm

Within this assemblage P. manipurensis is most similar to ‘P.meingangbii and P. padamya by virtue of the fact that males in all three possess orange-red pigmentation on the flanks and caudal-fin.

It can be told apart most easily by the fact it possesses a relatively small, spot-like humeral marking, vs. a vertically-elongated, relatively large humeral marking in both the other species.

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Barbodes banksi HERRE, 1940

August 9th, 2012 — 2:36pm

This species is not often seen in the aquarium hobby but occasionally exported as bycatch among shipments of other fishes. It was described as a subspecies of the closely-related ‘P.binotatus but is currently considered distinct on a tentative basis as per Ng and Tan (1999) who stated it is ‘likely’ that the two represent extreme colour forms of a single, variably-patterned species.

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